The Missouri Democratic Party is holding its quarterly meeting on January 30. I wish I could invite you to it, but the Party is closing the meeting to the public.

I strongly oppose this lack of transparency, and I am exploring every avenue to fight back.

1/

I've been to every meeting since 2016, even those that required me to be on the road at 5 AM so I could make it for an hour and then get back on the campaign trail to ask my fellow Missourians to vote for Democrats. This will be the first one I miss; I'm not allowed to come.

2/
My position - and I believe the position of many of you - has been very clear: We need more, not less, transparency, in our government.

3/
That is especially true for the Missouri Democratic Party, an organization that has a poor reputation in many parts of our state, primarily, as I learned, because people are unfamiliar with what it stands for. At least, that's what I used to be able to say.

4/
I learned about this closed meeting while I was preparing to protect government transparency at the Missouri Supreme Court. I thought the Missouri Democratic Party supported that given how quickly the Party capitalized off of my work, often without attribution.

5/
Whether the Party does or does not support transparency, I know a whole lot of people in our state who do. I know a whole lot of Party members and leaders who do and are likely as pissed off as I am right now.

6/
And now I find myself looking at Missouri's Sunshine Law to see if there is any avenue to require the Party to act as it says. If I do discover a way, and the Party continues to reject public participation and transparency, I will not hesitate to enforce the law.

7/
I'm not alone in saying something. Folks are speaking out not because we hate the Party. It's because we know it needs to be better.

8/
We understand that working Missourians have little representation in our government right now, and we have seen the consequences of this Party's failures and the utter lack of balance we have in our state government.

9/
We have lost the opportunity to put wonderful candidates in positions of leadership. We've lost protections on the job. We've lost parents to our broken health care system. We've lost children to increasing violence.

10/
But still, despite all of it, despite how in the last several years the Party has often not been there when it needed to be, so many of us are still here and willing to get to work.

11/
So many folks holding Democratic meetings throughout Missouri every month. So many people serving our state, many I just saw collecting food for those in need. Why are we excluding them?

12/
I have faith that many members of the Party leadership disagree with this decision. I urge you to stand up for those of us who will not have a voice tomorrow. I also urge the Party caucuses to hold public meetings and encourage participation.

13/
And I urge each and every one of you to take action. The Party is not one of us. It is supposed to belong to all of us. But its potential will continue to dissipate into nothingness as long as we don't have the courage to stand up when we see something wrong.

14/
This Party will be nothing without people. It's a shame that some folks still don't understand that. It's up to us to make sure they do.

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The Missouri Democratic Party must be reformed. It must leave its weakness behind to stand with - not just for, but with - those who have been ignored and neglected for far too long in our state.

16/
It must truly be the Party of working people, of transparency, and participation, of Democracy. We can't just talk about it. We have to be about it. Or no one will be about us.

17/
It breaks my heart thinking of all of the people who have worked so hard for so many years just to see this come from the Party. They deserve much better.

18/
Many months ago, the Missouri Democratic Party Progressive Caucus allowed me to speak for a few minutes as a candidate. A few weeks before, one of my kids I taught was shot and killed in his backyard. He was 7.

19/
I told the room that it was this Party that needed to be his voice, that we had to be open and organized and powerful for him, for his sisters who will forever feel an emptiness in their heart, for the many loved ones we have lost to the lack of leadership in our state.

20/
I'm proud the Caucus took a stand today. I encourage you to read their words.

To my friends who can, take a stand tomorrow.
To my friends who cannot, do something anyway.

Missouri needs you.

https://t.co/DWYgWQnrQl

21/21

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The UN just voted to condemn Israel 9 times, and the rest of the world 0.

View the resolutions and voting results here:

The resolution titled "The occupied Syrian Golan," which condemns Israel for "repressive measures" against Syrian citizens in the Golan Heights, was adopted by a vote of 151 - 2 - 14.

Israel and the U.S. voted 'No'
https://t.co/HoO7oz0dwr


The resolution titled "Israeli practices affecting the human rights of the Palestinian people..." was adopted by a vote of 153 - 6 - 9.

Australia, Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and the U.S. voted 'No' https://t.co/1Ntpi7Vqab


The resolution titled "Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem, and the occupied Syrian Golan" was adopted by a vote of 153 – 5 – 10.

Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and the U.S. voted 'No'
https://t.co/REumYgyRuF


The resolution titled "Applicability of the Geneva Convention... to the
Occupied Palestinian Territory..." was adopted by a vote of 154 - 5 - 8.

Canada, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, and the U.S. voted 'No'
https://t.co/xDAeS9K1kW
I've seen many news articles cite that "the UK variant could be the dominant strain by March". This is emphasized by @CDCDirector.

While this will likely to be the case, this should not be an automatic cause for concern. Cases could still remain contained.

Here's how: 🧵

One of @CDCgov's own models has tracked the true decline in cases quite accurately thus far.

Their projection shows that the B.1.1.7 variant will become the dominant variant in March. But interestingly... there's no fourth wave. Cases simply level out:

https://t.co/tDce0MwO61


Just because a variant becomes the dominant strain does not automatically mean we will see a repeat of Fall 2020.

Let's look at UK and South Africa, where cases have been falling for the past month, in unison with the US (albeit with tougher restrictions):


Furthermore, the claim that the "variant is doubling every 10 days" is false. It's the *proportion of the variant* that is doubling every 10 days.

If overall prevalence drops during the studied time period, the true doubling time of the variant is actually much longer 10 days.

Simple example:

Day 0: 10 variant / 100 cases -> 10% variant
Day 10: 15 variant / 75 cases -> 20% variant
Day 20: 20 variant / 50 cases -> 40% variant

1) Proportion of variant doubles every 10 days
2) Doubling time of variant is actually 20 days
3) Total cases still drop by 50%

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